I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 57 with Changing Lines 1, 3 to Hexagram 61

Yin Yang symbol, representing balance

Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 57.1.3 -> 61

57. Penetration (巽 Xùn)

Trigrams

Above
☴ Xùn (Wind) — 風 · Penetrating
Below
☴ Xùn (Wind) — 風 · Penetrating

The Symbolism of Hexagram 57

Hexagram 巽 (Xùn) represents penetration through repetition and continuity. Influence enters gradually, working its way into a system not by force, but by persistence and alignment.

Wind following wind creates a reinforcing pattern—each movement supports and extends the previous one. Nothing happens abruptly. Instead, change accumulates through repeated contact, eventually reaching depth. This reflects a system where subtle, sustained influence is more effective than direct assertion.

Hexagram 57 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
巽,小亨,利有攸往,利見大人。
(Xùn, xiǎo hēng, lì yǒu yōu wǎng, lì jiàn dà rén.)
English Translation:
"Penetration. Limited smooth progress. It is favorable to move with direction. It is favorable to engage a person of great capacity."

This hexagram describes influence that works indirectly and accumulates over time. Because it does not act through force, its progress is gradual and limited in immediate effect.

For penetration to be effective, it must be guided by clear direction and supported by alignment with a stable structure or authority. Without this, repetition becomes diffusion rather than influence. When properly directed, however, even subtle action can reshape the system from within.

Hexagram 57 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
隨風,巽。君子以申命行事。
(Suí fēng, xùn. Jūn zǐ yǐ shēn mìng xíng shì.)
English Translation:
"Wind follows upon wind: penetration. The superior person reiterates commands and carries things through."

Each movement reinforces the last, creating continuity rather than isolated effort. The power of penetration lies in its ability to persist without interruption.

The superior person ensures that intention is not expressed once, but sustained over time. By repeating and clarifying direction, influence gradually takes hold. Consistency transforms subtle action into lasting effect.

Line 1 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
進退,利武人之貞。
(Jìn tuì, lì wǔ rén zhī zhēn.)
English Translation:
"Advancing and retreating. It is favorable to maintain disciplined steadiness."

At the beginning, penetration lacks consistency. Movement alternates between progress and hesitation, preventing depth from being established.

Stability must be imposed through discipline. Like a trained force maintaining formation, repeated action must become structured and reliable. Without this, influence dissipates before it can take hold.

Line 3 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
頻巽,吝。
(Pín xùn, lìn.)
English Translation:
"Repeated penetration. Constrained outcome."

Repetition without direction leads to inefficiency. The system applies influence again and again, but without coherence or purpose.

Instead of building depth, the action becomes scattered and ineffective. This creates frustration and waste. Penetration must be guided—otherwise, repetition devolves into noise rather than meaningful change.

Changing to:

61. Coherence (中孚 Zhōng Fú)

Trigrams

Above
☴ Xùn (Wind) — 風 · Penetrating
Below
☱ Duì (Lake) — 澤 · Open

The Symbolism of Hexagram 61

Hexagram 中孚 (Zhōng Fú) describes inner truth as systemic coherence—an alignment between internal state, outward expression, and relational exchange. It is not merely sincerity as a moral quality, but structural integrity across layers of a system.

Wind moving over and within the lake illustrates subtle influence operating through openness. The lake receives, the wind penetrates—together they form a field where signals travel clearly without obstruction. When inner alignment is present, communication becomes trustworthy, and responses arise naturally without distortion.

The core dynamic is resonance. Coherence allows signals to propagate faithfully across boundaries, creating trust not through force, but through consistency. When this alignment is broken, communication fragments and trust collapses.

Hexagram 61 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
中孚,豚魚吉,利涉大川,利貞。
(Zhōng fú, tún yú jí, lì shè dà chuān, lì zhēn.)
English Translation:
"Inner coherence. Even simple beings respond with underlying alignment. Favorable outcome. It is favorable to undertake a major transition. It is favorable to remain correctly aligned."

This judgment describes a condition in which internal alignment produces genuine trust. The reference to 'pigs and fish' points to the most basic level of response—when coherence is real, even the simplest systems respond reliably.

Because signals are consistent and unforced, action can extend into complex or uncertain environments. Crossing great waters represents engagement with scale, risk, or transition, made possible through integrity rather than control.

Constancy is essential. Coherence must be maintained over time; only sustained alignment preserves trust and allows successful movement through complexity.

Hexagram 61 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
風行澤中,中孚。君子以議獄緩死。
(Fēng xíng zé zhōng, zhōng fú. Jūn zǐ yǐ yì yù huǎn sǐ.)
English Translation:
"Wind moves within the lake: coherence. The superior person deliberates legal cases and delays executions."

Wind moving within the lake represents influence operating inside an open and receptive system. Because the structure is not obstructed, subtle signals can travel accurately and be received without distortion.

The superior person applies this principle to decision-making. When coherence is present, judgment becomes more precise, but also more humane—there is no need for harsh or premature action.

By slowing decisions, especially irreversible ones, the system ensures that conclusions arise from true alignment rather than reactive imbalance. Coherence produces clarity, and clarity tempers severity.

Peace and wisdom on your journey!

With gratitude,
The I Ching Team